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Henritzy v. Harrison County

Supreme Court of Mississippi, Division B
Jan 24, 1938
180 Miss. 675 (Miss. 1938)

Summary

In Henritzy, a decade after the construction of its original seawall, Harrison County sought an injunction against a landowner who refused to remove a structure that prevented the county from making improvements to the seawall.

Summary of this case from Daricek Living Trust v. Hancock County

Opinion

No. 33088.

January 24, 1938.

1. EMINENT DOMAIN.

The statute authorizing county supervisors to take land for a sea wall and requiring landowners to claim compensation within a specified time does not violate the Constitution forbidding the taking of property without compensation first being made (Laws 1924, chapter 319, section 5; Const. section 17).

2. JURY.

The statute requiring owners of land taken for a sea wall to claim compensation within a specified time is not unconstitutional as depriving them of a jury trial, since the statute provides for a review by the circuit court and a jury therein to assess damages, subject to the giving of a cost bond not exceeding $200 (Laws 1924, chapter 319, sections 5, 6).

3. EMINENT DOMAIN.

A county taking a 50-foot right of way about 26 miles long and constructing a concrete sea wall on the south 15 feet thereof and an earthen fill on the remaining 35 feet acquired title by adverse possession under the 10-year statute (Laws 1924, chapter 319; Code 1930, section 2287).

4. EMINENT DOMAIN.

The owner of land taken for a sea wall waives his right to damages by failing to claim compensation within the thirty days limited by the statute after the last published notice (Laws 1924, chapter 319, section 5).

5. EMINENT DOMAIN.

A claim for damages for the taking of land for a sea wall more than ten years previously is barred by limitations, as against the then owner and those claiming under him (Laws 1924, chapter 319.

6. EMINENT DOMAIN.

The successor to the title of the owner of land previously taken by the county for a sea wall cannot recover damages therefor from the county, in the absence of evidence that such successor acquired by assignment, either by contract or law, the right of the original owner to sue for damages.

7. VENDOR AND PURCHASER.

The purchaser of land takes it without any right of action for former trespasses.

8. LEVEES AND FLOOD CONTROL.

The statute authorizing the construction of sea walls by county supervisors and the appointment of a road protection commission is not unconstitutional as conferring on the commission any of the supervisors' constitutional jurisdiction over roads and bridges; all of the commission's acts involving judgment and discretion being made subject to the supervisors' approval (Laws 1924, chapter 319; Const., section 170).

9. EMINENT DOMAIN.

The statute providing for the taking of land for a sea wall, etc., and publication of notice in a newspaper for "thirty days" does not contemplate daily publication, and publication on four days with intervals of one week between each publication is sufficient (Laws 1924, chapter 319, section 5).

APPEAL from the chancery court of Harrison county. HON. D.M. RUSSELL, Chancellor.

J.L. Taylor, of Gulfport, for appellant.

The Chancellor erred in holding Chapter 319, Laws of 1924, constitutional. We submit that the law is unconstitutional and violative of Sections 17 and 170. Chapter 319 seeks to give authority for eminent domain in Section 5 of the act by providing that, "the Road Protection Commission shall make publication for thirty days in some newspaper published in the county wherein such improvements are made, setting forth the commencement and termination with a general outline of the nature and extent thereof." Then provides that any landowner or other person shall claim compensation for damages sustained shall petition the board of supervisors within thirty days after the expiration of the time provided for such publication, etc. It will be observed that the only notice provided to be given is by publication by the road protection commission, and no notice is required to be given by the Board of Supervisors. Section 170 of the Constitution provides, among other things, that the board of supervisors shall have full jurisdiction over roads, etc. Section 170 also provides that the Legislature may have power to designate certain highways as state highways, and place such highways under the control and supervision of the State Highway Commission, for construction and maintenance. United States 90 is a state highway, and Section 319 vests in the Road Protection Commission and the Board of Supervisors the maintenance of this road in providing that it might be maintained and protected by the construction of the sea wall. In view of this statement of fact, it would appear that the State Highway Department would have the right of eminent domain and thus Chapter 319 is violative of Section 170 of the Constitution.

Chapter 26 of the Code of 1930, is a chapter on eminent domain and which procedure must be followed, "except as elsewhere in this code specifically provided."

Eminent domain is a special statutory proceeding, but Chapter 319 only provides that the road protection commission shall make publication for thirty days in some newspaper published in the county, and that the owner, notwithstanding he may be a resident, must appear before the Board of Supervisors and file a petition within thirty days.

The board of supervisors has to speak through its minutes, and when notices are required to be given, the clerk is instructed to give such notice. It is not necessary for me to say that every jurisdictional fact must appear affirmatively of record as the board has limited special statutory authority.

Craft v. DeSoto County, 79 Miss. 618, 31 So. 204.

The law does not provide for the giving of the notice to any owner, but simply provides that the road protection commission, "whenever it shall become necessary to construct, widen or protect any highway under the provisions of this act, the road protection commission shall make publication for thirty days in some newspaper published in the county wherein such improvements are made, setting forth the commencement and termination with a general outline of the nature and extent thereof." Unfortunately, this is all that the road protection commission is required to publish or give notice of, and the board of supervisors is not required to give any notice and notwithstanding Mississippi U.S. 90 as it then and now exists is a state highway, and the Highway Department is not authorized or directed to give any notice, but on this flimsy notice Section 319 seeks to give authority to condemn and take a strip of land 50 feet wide and 27 miles long owned by hundreds of different owners.

The court erred in holding that the county had acquired title to the 35 feet immediately north of the present sea wall by condemnation proceedings. The very purpose of Chapter 319 was to erect sea walls or other structures or devices for the protection of public highway extending along the beach or shore of any such body of tidewater, etc. It is shown that the sea wall only occupies 15 feet from north to south, and that it was sought to condemn 50 feet for the purpose of constructing a sea wall to protect a public road extending along the beach or shore.

Chapter 26 of the Code of 1930, is the chapter on eminent domain, and the record in this cause does not show that Chapter 26 was used or followed in any way, so that we contend the county did not acquire the 35 feet north of the present sea wall by condemnation proceedings.

The proceedings had were under an unconstitutional act and void, so that the county has no more right to claim the 35 foot strip by adverse possession than it has to claim the strip north thereof between the 35 foot strip and Highway 90.

We contend that the appellant is entitled to recover damages or compensation at this time because it is now proposed to build a road across the property and thus put an additional servitude on his land.

We submit that the court could not confirm the title to the strip of land for the reason that there was no deraignment of title as provided by Section 405 of the Code of 1930.

George R. Smith, of Pass Christian, for appellee.

In seeking to attack the constitutionality of Chapter 319 of the Laws of Mississippi of 1924, appellant confuses the issues: Whether the taking was lawful; and whether the property owners are now precluded from asserting claims for damages due to what appellant contends was a defective notice to property owners to assert claims for damages. That the authority to exercise the right of eminent domain under the state of facts that existed at that time was legally vested in the Board of Supervisors of Harrison County, and the act granting such specific authority constitutional, can hardly be questioned.

Brown v. Beatty, 34 Miss. 227; Ladner v. Road Protection Com., Hancock Co., 150 Miss. 416, 116 So. 602.

The Board of Supervisors acted within its authority and no appeal having been taken from its order of condemnation, the same became final and the only question that remained was regarding the rights of property owners to assert claims for damages. This is especially true in view of the fact that all of the proceedings related to the preservation of the public roads and highways under the jurisdiction of the Board of Supervisors and for the building, maintenance and preservation of which they were vested with full constitutional authority.

Section 5 provided for publication for thirty days, and we respectfully submit the publication made was sufficient and constituted a substantial and sufficient compliance with the provisions of the statute.

20 C.J. 934.

Despite anything in the notice that may have been construed as limiting the time in which claims for damages could have been filed, we respectfully submit that any such matter would have been mere surplusage; the statute required no date or deadline to be fixed in the notice and if such had been fixed in conflict with the statute it would not have been binding upon the landowners and would not have precluded their filing claims for damages within the full period fixed by the statute.

State ex rel. Chelan Electric Co. v. Superior Court, 142 Wn. 270, 253 P. 115; Stewart v. Board of Police, 25 Miss. 479; 20 C.J. 934; Cage v. Trager, 60 Miss. 563.

The contention that compensation to landowners should have been made prior to the taking or using of the property affected is not supported by the repeated decisions of this court.

Hinds County v. Johnson, 98 So. 95, 133 Miss. 591; Cage v. Trager, 60 Miss. 563; Levee Commissioners v. Dancy, 65 Miss. 335; Joslin v. Providence, 262 U.S. 668, 43 Sup. Ct. 684, 67 L.Ed. 1167; Highway Commission v. Buchanan, 165 So. 795, 175 Miss. 154; Byrd v. Jackson County, 176 So. 386.

We submit that the notice provided by Chapter 319 of the Acts of 1924, meets all constitutional requirements; and that the notice actually made in this matter was a sufficient and substantial compliance with the statute and, inasmuch as the statute fixes the remedy to be followed by the landowners in claiming damages; that remedy is exclusive.

Copiah County v. Lusk, 77 Miss. 136; W.U. Tel. Co. v. Railroad, 107 Miss. 626, 65 So. 650; N.O. G.N.R. Co. v. Hemphill, 35 Miss. 1; Stewart v. Board of Police of Hinds County, 25 Miss. 479.

If, however, any question did exist as to the legality or sufficiency of the notice, which we respectfully deny, appellant is now barred from asserting any claim under the statutes of limitations of our state, and particularly Sections 2285, 2287, 2291 and 2292, Code of 1930.

Romano v. Y. M.V.R.R. Co., 87 Miss. 721, 40 So. 150.

If any question existed as to the validity of the condemnation of the right-of-way, which we again respectfully deny, appellant is now barred from asserting same under Section 2285 of the Code, the same being an action concerning land; and the title to the full fifty foot right of way has become vested under the provisions of Section 2287 of the Code of 1930, by adverse possession, the actual possession of the south fifteen feet of said right of way having had constructed thereon a step type concrete sea wall for twelve years next preceding the commencement of this suit, together with the other acts of possession and under the color of title of the condemnation proceedings vested the county with a full and complete title to the easement.

Long Island R.R. Co. v. Mulry, 212 N.Y. 108, 105 N.E. 806, Ann. Cas. 1915D 298.

We respectfully submit the decree of the lower court should be affirmed. Gardner Backstrom, of Gulfport, for appellee.

The right of eminent domain is an inherent and essential right of sovereignty. This is recognized by Section 17 of the Constitution. Limitations, or restrictions, are placed on this inherent and essential right of sovereignty. Limitations and restrictions placed on an admitted right must always be strictly construed against the limitation or restriction and in favor of the admitted right. This is a rule of universal application which needs no citation of authority. Section 17 of the Constitution is, therefore, restrictive and not enabling, and its restrictions should be strictly construed in favor of the sovereign. The condemnation involved in this suit was by Harrison County, a political subdivision of the state, and therefore, by the sovereign itself. The state, as sovereign, or any of its political subdivisions, can exercise the right of eminent domain free from restrictions and limitations save those imposed by the aforesaid Section 17 of the Constitution. The limitation is solely that private property shall not be taken or damaged for public use except upon compensation being first made in a manner to be prescribed by law. Such notice and procedure as the statute may require must be observed, but beyond that there is no restriction or limitation on the exercise of the power.

Brown v. Beatty, 34 Miss. 227; Southworth v. City of Glasgow, 232 Mo. 108, 132 S.W. 1168, Ann. Cas. 1912B 1267; Jackson v. Guss, 86 Kan. 280, 120 P. 353.

The requirement that compensation shall first be made is for the sole protection of the property owner. Where the full faith and credit of the state, or any of its political subdivisions, stands as a guarantee that the property owner will be compensated, this is equivalent to actual tender of payment. In such a case it is not essential that actual payment precede the taking.

Cage v. Trager, 60 Miss. 563; Hinds County v. Johnson, 133 Miss. 591, 98 So. 95; State Highway Commission v. Buchanan, 175 Miss. 157, 166 So. 537; Byrd v. Jackson County, 176 So. 386.

Chapter 319 of the Laws of 1924 is introductory of a new law, namely, the exercise of the right of eminent domain to protect an existing highway from damage or destruction by storms in cases where the highway extends along a body of tide water and the highway is subject or exposed to, and is in danger of, damage by water driven across the shore by storms. If such a statute provides that a thing shall be done in a certain way, the thing so provided to be done shall not be done in any other manner even though there are no negative words in the statute.

Brown v. Beatty, 34 Miss. 227.

Defendant appears to argue that damages in eminent domain proceedings should be assessed by a jury. This is unsound, for the Legislature has the power to provide that damages for the taking may be assessed other than by a jury, and the right of trial by jury is not thereby infringed.

Railroad Co. v. Drake, 60 Miss. 621.

Furthermore, the enactment under discussion provides that the landowner may appeal from the assessment of damages by the board of supervisors and his damages, in that event, may be assessed by a jury.

Chapter 319 of the Laws of 1924 is a general law, and, therefore, does not violate paragraph "r" of Section 90 of the Constitution, providing that damages in eminent domain shall be assessed under general laws.

Drainage District v. Buckner, 108 Miss. 427, 66 So. 784.

Eminent domain proceedings cannot violate due process, provided the statutory requirements for the taking have been complied with.

Brown v. Beatty, 34 Miss. 227; 20 C.J. 516.

The method of condemnation and compensation provided for by Chapter 319 of the Laws of 1924 is substantially the same as that provided for in the establishing, laying out, changing and alteration of public roads by Sections 4400 to 4403 of the Code of 1906, brought forward as Sections 6340 to 6343 of the Code of 1930. The constitutionality of these statutes has been so repeatedly held by this court that their constitutionality is no longer an open question.

Cage v. Trager, 60 Miss. 563; Hinds County v. Johnson, 133 Miss. 591; State Highway Commission v. Buchanan, 175 Miss. 157; Byrd v. Jackson County, 176 So. 386.

But it is intimated that resident landowners are entitled to be served personally with process or the board of supervisors does not acquire jurisdiction of the person of the landowners so as to condemn their property. There are two answers to this contention, first, eminent domain is a proceeding in rem, and jurisdiction over the rem is all that is necessary, and second, this court, in Stewart v. Hinds County, 25 Miss. 479, a proceeding for the condemnation of a Public road right of way, held that if the statute so provided notice by publication was sufficient.

Judged by the rule announced in the foregoing authorities, we confidently maintain that Chapter 319 of the Laws of 1924 is not violative of Section 17 of the Constitution.

Whether the record reflects that the notice provided to be given by the road protection commission complies with the provisions of the statute depends on the construction which this court places on the order of the board of supervisors of Harrison County, Mississippi, adjudicating that it had been so published, including the form of the notice and a proof of publication set out in said order as a part thereof. If the court agrees with us that said order establishes a strict compliance with the provisions of the statute, then it will not be necessary to consider the questions hereinafter discussed, as this will necessitate an affirmance of the case in its entirety.

The condemnation of the sea wall and road protection right of way was, in view of the provisions of said Chapter 319 of the Laws of 1924, a judicial proceeding. The order of the board of supervisors now under consideration is the judgment rendered in that proceeding, and as such has all of the force and effect of any other judgment rendered by a court of competent jurisdiction, and imports absolute verity.

By section 170 of the Constitution boards of supervisors are given "full" jurisdiction over roads, and this includes the protection of roads along the sea shore from damage by water driven across the shore from storms. This does not admit of doubt. In the condemnation of the road protection right of way involved in the case at bar the board of supervisors of Harrison County, Mississippi, was acting as a constitutional court of "full" jurisdiction, which includes general and original jurisdiction.

The only difference between the presumption of verity in favor of courts of general and original jurisdiction and courts of special and limited jurisdiction is that jurisdiction is presumed in favor of the former, but jurisdiction must appear on the face of the record of the latter court. In the latter court jurisdiction may be shown by an adjudication by the court, and this will be conclusive. In making such an adjudication the court may or may not make a record of the evidence on which it makes such adjudication. The adjudication itself is the deciding point.

Alvis v. Hicks, 150 Miss. 206, 116 So. 612.

Whether the record shows sufficient or insufficient evidence or no evidence whatever, therefore, becomes immaterial.

Eastman, Gardiner Co. v. Leverett, 141 Miss. 96, 106 So. 106; G. S.I.R.R. Co. v. Riley, 104 So. 81; Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen v. Agnew, 170 Miss. 604, 155 So. 205.

The attack made on the judgment of the board of supervisors is a collateral one.

Federal Reserve Bank v. Wall, 138 Miss. 204, 103 So. 5; Cotton v. Harlan, 124 Miss. 696, 87 So. 152.

In Whitley v. Towle, 163 Miss. 418, 141 So. 571, the court, speaking through Mr. Justice Griffith, held that on a collateral attack a showing that the record does not show the issuance and service of process was of no avail, and that that point could not be inquired into in such a proceeding.

On the authorities hereinabove reviewed, it is submitted that the order of the board of supervisors of Harrison County, Mississippi, under discussion is valid and binding, and that the condemnation proceedings were and are valid and binding and vested in Harrison County, Mississippi, a perfect title to an easement in and to the strip of land condemned for sea wall and road protection purposes. The decision of the lower court, therefore, was right and proper and should now be affirmed.

On the question of adverse possession little need be said. It is admitted that Harrison County has maintained a concrete sea wall on the south fifteen feet of the right of way for more than ten consecutive years preceding the filing of this suit. This is undeniably exclusive occupation and possession. It has likewise maintained an earthen fill on the north thirty-five feet of said strip for more than ten consecutive years preceding the filing of the bill of complaint.

The condemnation proceedings undoubtedly gave color of title, and the actual maintenance of the sea wall of concrete on the south fifteen feet thereof extended that possession to the calls of the color of title and perfected the county's title to the entire strip.

Farnsworth v. O'Neal, 158 Miss. 218, 130 So. 101.

It is now submitted that even if the condemnation proceedings were invalid, which is not admitted but denied, Harrison County now has a perfect title to the road protection right of way of fifty feet by adverse possession.

Argued orally by J.L. Taylor, for appellant, and by Geo. R. Smith and Oscar Backstrom, for appellee.


Appellee filed its bill and supplemental bill in the chancery court of Harrison County against appellant, praying for a mandatory injunction to compel appellant to remove a concrete, flat structure from the right of way climbed by appellee as an easement for sea wall and road protection purposes. The trial was had on the pleadings and agreed facts, resulting in a decree in appellee's favor. From that decree appellant prosecutes this appeal.

The facts are undisputed; they are set out in the original and supplemental bills and admissions of the answer and in the agreed facts. In stating the case we will follow closely the statement by appellee's counsel which is in accord with the facts.

Before the approval of chapter 319, Laws 1924, a public highway of the state ran along and adjacent to the shore line of the Mississippi Sound, a body of tidewater entirely across the south side of Harrison County. This roadway is known as United States highway No. 90. For many years prior to the adoption of the statute referred to this highway, on different occasions, suffered heavy damage from tropical storms which also damaged the shore line and adjacent property. This adjoining property was the most valuable in Harrison county. After the adoption of the statute, the board of supervisors of the county adjudicated that this highway was exposed or subject to and was in danger of much damage by water driven across it by shore storms; that it was not protected by any sea wall; and that it was necessary that it be protected under the provisions of chapter 319, Laws 1924. The board ordered that such adjudication of the conditions be certified to the Governor of the State, which was done. The Governor thereupon appointed five suitable freeholders of the county to be known and serve as a road protection commission with authority, in conjunction with the board of supervisors, to determine the character of road protection required. The commission met, organized and appointed one Shaw as engineer, which appointment was approved by the board of supervisors. The engineer made surveys, plans, specifications, and estimates of the cost of the necessary structure, which were approved by the road protection commission, and was reported to and filed with the board of supervisors, which duly approved and adopted the same. Thereupon the board of supervisors ordered an election to determine whether bonds of the county should be issued and sold to provide the necessary funds with which to carry out the plans and specifications. An election was accordingly held, and carried in favor of the bond issue, which bonds were thereupon issued and sold.

By the survey the right of way was located and staked out, and on April 7, 1925, the board of supervisors entered an order condemning the land so surveyed and staked out for road protection. Thereafter the road protection commission made publication in a newspaper published in Harrison county, as authorized by chapter 319, Laws 1924, advising all owners of the land so surveyed and staked out for right of way purposes that, if they desired to claim compensation for the land so taken or damaged by the proposed road protection construction, their claims therefor should be filed with the board of supervisors within thirty days after June 29, 1925. The road protection commission filed with the board of supervisors proof of publication of such notice, which showed that it was dated May 28, 1925, and fixed June 29th of the same year as the date from which the thirty days provided for filing claims for damages should be reckoned. Statutory requirements in other respects were complied with. The notice was published in the Coast Beacon on June 13, 20, 27, and July 4, 1925. The board of supervisors at its regular meeting in September thereafter adjudicated that the notice had been published in all respects as required by the statute, and entered an order on its minutes adjudicating that the land situated in the surveyed right of way had been legally and finally condemned as a right of way for road protection purposes. The right of way sought to be condemned is 50 feet in width and traverses the most densely populated section of Harrison county. The land adjoining it on the north is composed largely of building lots facing the Mississippi Sound. The right of way extends along the shore of the sound for a distance of approximately 26 miles. After the condemnation proceedings had been completed, the county entered into the actual possession of the strip of land, including that involved in this case, and constructed on the south 15 feet thereof a concrete sea wall, after the completion of which an earthen fill was made back of and to the north of the sea wall on the remaining 35 feet of the right of way so sought to be condemned. The sea wall and earthen fill have been maintained and kept in repair by the county until the present time. The 35 feet north of the sea wall is necessary for the proper maintenance of the sea wall; it is necessary to maintain thereon an earthen fill to prevent washouts and the undermining of the sea wall; also for a right of way to enable the county to reach the sea wall and repair it when repairs are needed. This 35-foot strip has been continuously used and occupied for more than ten consecutive years prior to the bringing of this suit.

At the time of the condemnation proceedings, as well as at the time of the construction of the sea wall, the land here involved was owned by Judge Kimbrough who, in addition to the notice by publication referred to, also had actual notice of the construction of the sea wall and the earthen fill, and claimed no damages or compensation therefor. Appellant acquired the strip of land involved in the year 1936, succeeding to the title, if any, formerly owned by Judge Kimbrough. Recently appellant erected on the 35-foot strip a concrete structure which will interfere with the rights of the county. The county now desires to use the 35-foot strip for the purpose of building a concrete or other hard-surface apron or slab thereon, capable of being used as an additional public road and also for adding strength and stability to the sea wall structure, and also for the protection of the present existing highway. This plan is in accordance with the original purpose of the condemnation of the 50-foot strip. It could not be put into execution at that time because it was necessary that the earthen fill be allowed to settle in order to afford a firm foundation for the additional road protection then contemplated, and further because the financial affairs of the county did not justify the necessary expenditure for that purpose. The earthen fill is now settled so as to afford a firm foundation for the additional road and road protection then contemplated. The county is now financially able to put its original plan into execution.

The questions involved are whether the statute is violative of section 17 of the Constitution; of section 170 of the Constitution; whether the publication of the notice to property owners in the condemnation proceeding complied with the statute; if the condemnation proceedings were void, nevertheless, whether the county acquired title to the strip of land by adverse possession; and, if void, whether appellant is barred from any damages he might have been entitled to by the statute of limitations.

The chancellor in his opinion, which is made a part of the record, disposes specifically of all the questions involved except whether the publication of the notice was sufficient, and whether the statute violated section 170 of the Constitution. We do not think we could do better than to adopt his opinion as that of the court so far as it goes. The opinion deals first with section 17 of the Constitution:

"As authority to sustain his position, counsel for defendant relies mainly on Levee Commissioners v. Dancy, 65 Miss. 335, 3 So. 568, wherein it was held that, as a condition precedent to taking private property under condemnation proceedings, compensation must first be made to the owner of said property; and that the owner cannot be required to initiate proceedings to secure his compensation. But it will be noted from reading the opinion that the court differentiated between the case of a private corporation seeking to take property by condemnation proceedings and a proceeding by the State, or one of its subdivisions, this appearing in the open statement of the court:

"'In this state, "due compensation first being made" is a precedent condition of the appropriation of private property for public use; and whatever may be allowable "where the state or any of its subdivisions is concerned in the appropriation," as held in Cage v. Trager, 60 Miss. 563, it is not true that the owner may be paid the price of his property by a requirement that he shall initiate proceedings for compensation against a corporation which is not the state or one of its subdivisions, and against which it is said and truly, no personal judgment can be rendered, but only an award of a sum of money, without execution to enforce it.'

"In support of their contention that chapter 319 of the Laws of 1924 is constitutional, including section 5 thereof, which provides that publication may be made to the owners of lands sought to be condemned for such right of way as is here involved for thirty days in a newspaper, requiring that said owners shall make and file whatever claim they may desire to make as compensation for such right of way, etc., counsel for complainant cite numerous authorities, relying chiefly on Stewart v. Board of Police of Hinds County, 25 Miss. 479; Cage v. Trager, 60 Miss. 563, and Hinds County v. Johnson, 133 Miss. 591, 98 So. 95, 96.

"In the Stewart Case, which was a condemnation proceeding instituted by Hinds County for the purpose of condemning a right of way for use as a public highway, the court said:

"'We consider the proceedings of the boards of police in this State, condemning lands to be used as public highways, strictly proceedings in rem, and that the orders made by them in relation thereto, are to be governed by the rules and principles applicable to such cases. Such was evidently the intention of the legislature, as it has not made any provision on the subject of notice, nor directed any manner in which it shall be given. The whole community is vitally interested in the efficient exercise, by the boards of police, of the jurisdiction on the subject of roads conferred upon those tribunals by the constitution and laws. The jurisdiction conferred upon them is of a peculiar character, in which every citizen is interested. The subject-matter on which they act, is of a public nature, independent of private parties. The judgments rendered by them act upon the thing itself, which is condemned to the use of the public, and we believe the public interests imperatively require that the orders made by them, when made pursuant to the statutes, should conclude the whole world, whether actual notice was given or not to the parties interested in the premises. It is manifest, that actual notice could not be given in many instances, as it cannot be presumed that the boards of police could know, in all cases, in whom the title was vested to every tract of land in the county necessary to be condemned for public roads, and under such circumstances to declare that these orders of condemnation without this notice are not valid and obligatory, would produce a degree of public inconvenience which nothing would justify, unless the rules of law demanded it. But we do not believe such to be the law. On the contrary, we believe the present case strictly a proceeding in rem, in which the order of the court is conclusive, whether the party had notice of the proceeding or not.'

"In the Stewart Case the point was made by the owner of the land that he could not be bound by the condemnation proceeding without being first personally served with notice, he being a resident of the State. But the court held that notice in such cases may be either actual or constructive, and particularly so in a case like this which is a proceeding in rem, and not in personam. This was a case of first impression, but the rule there announced has never been overruled or modified.

"The case of Hinds County v. Johnson, supra, is squarely in point and disposes of the question raised as to the constitutionality of the act involved, and particularly section 5 thereof. This was a proceeding by Hinds county to condemn a right of way for public highway over lands belonging to the appellee. The proceeding was instituted under the statutory provisions substantially similar to those here involved. There the court said:

"'In making the proposed change in said public highway the county complied strictly with the provisions of the above statute [sections 4400 to 4402, inclusive, Code 1906]. In determining the question of the constitutionality of said statute, the following principles of construction should be borne in mind: That all doubts as to its constitutionality will be resolved in its favor. The court must be convinced beyond a reasonable doubt of the unconstitutionality of the statute, and, where two different interpretations are possible, that which will uphold its validity should be adopted' — citing numerous authorities.

"The court makes this further observation:

"'Are the state and its political subdivisions barred by section 17 of the Constitution from taking property for public use without making compensation in advance therefor, in the sense that the owner must first be paid or tendered in actual currency of the government the damages he has suffered? Clearly, under decisions of this court, that is the rule where property is taken for public use by others than the state or some political subdivision thereof. We think this question was answered in the negative by Cage v. Trager, 60 Miss. 563. It was distinctly held in that case that the state, or any political subdivision thereof, seeking to condemn land for public use, might occupy and use the land in advance of actual payment therefor, and that where notice was given the owner, and a fair opportunity afforded him to propound his claim for compensation, there was no constitutional objection to the requirement that the duty should be upon the owner to take the initiative and propound his claim.'

"There follows this further observation by the court:

"'The requirement of compensation in advance was to insure payment to the owner. It was in the nature of a guaranty against insolvency of the taker of his land. It was to relieve him of the uncertainties and exigencies of an ordinary unpaid claim, subject to be reduced to judgment, resulting in a nulla bona execution. These reasons can have no application or force to the taking of private property for public use by the state or any of its political subdivisions. There can be no personal judgment against the taker enforceable by execution. The taking in such a case means that the entire faith and credit and taxing power of the political body exercising the right is pledged to make the owner due compensation when ascertained.'

"In disposing of the Dancy Case, relied on here by defendant, the court has this to say:

"'Appellee relies upon the case of Levee Commissioners v. Dancy, 65 Miss. 335, 3 So. 568. It will be observed in the first place that that case neither overruled nor modified the principle laid down in Cage v. Trager, supra. On the contrary, it expressly recognized the principle here invoked by stating what was decided in Cage v. Trager, and distinguishing it from the Dancy Case. The difference in the two cases is simply this: In the Cage-Trager Case there was a taking of property by a political subdivision of the state, while in the Dancy Case the board of levee commissioners for the Yazoo-Mississippi Delta was treated as a private corporation and not a political subdivision of the state. And the court held therefore that the principle applying to the state and its political subdivisions had no application, and the owner had to be compensated before the taking of his property, and the statute there involved requiring him to make claim for his compensation and limiting the time of its making was void.'

"It seems, therefore, unnecessary to refer to additional authority to establish the constitutionality of the provisions of chapter 319 governing the condemnation of the right of way involved.

"It has been argued in support of the contention that the act is unconstitutional that it deprives the owner of the land of the right of a trial by jury in condemnation proceedings. The answer to that argument is found in section 6 of the said chapter and which provides for a review by the circuit court of the condemnation proceedings, including the right of a jury to assess the damages.

"The bill of complaint, not to say the agreement of counsel on file, establishes title in the county to the said right of way under our ten-year adverse possession statute. Code 1930, section 2287. A right of way, definitely described and identified by physical markings, has been claimed, occupied, and used publicly continuously by the county authorities for more than ten years prior to the filing of the bill of complaint, and, in fact, prior to the acquisition of title by the defendant. The south 15 feet of the right of way has been occupied by the sea wall proper, and this within itself, under the evidence as reflected by the agreed statement of facts, would clearly extend the claim and occupancy to the calls of the northern boundary of the 50-foot right of way as color of title.

"But it is claimed by the defendant that in any event, he is entitled to recover damages for the taking of his property to the amount of at least $250 notwithstandinging the fact that no claim for damages was filed within the time required, to-wit, within thirty days after the giving of the published notice, nor at any other time. This position, however, is likewise untenable, for the reason, first, that if the governing act is constitutional, as we hold it to be, the then owner of the property waived his right to recover damages by failing to make claim for same within the time and in the manner provided by the act. In the second place, the claim is barred by the statute of limitations, as against the owner at the time of the condemnation, and those claiming under him. In the third place, there is nothing in this record to evidence or indicate that the defendant acquired by assignment, either by contract or law, the right of Judge Kimbrough to sue for and recover damages on account of the taking of said property for right of way purposes." The purchaser of land takes it without any right of action for former trespasses. Blodgett v. Seals, 78 Miss. 522, 29 So. 852; Leavenworth v. Hunter, 150 Miss. 750, 117 So. 122; Masonite Corporation v. Burnham, 164 Miss. 840, 146 So. 292, 91 A.L.R. 752.

Section 170 of the Constitution provides, among other things, that the boards of supervisors "shall have full jurisdiction over roads, ferries, and bridges, to be exercised in accordance with such regulations as the legislature may prescribe." The argument that chapter 319 of the Laws of 1924 takes away and confers on the road protection commission any of the authority of the boards of supervisors over roads, bridges, and ferries is without merit. The road protection commission was authorized to act alone in a ministerial and advisory capacity toward the board of supervisors — all of its acts involving judgment and discretion were made subject to the approval of the board of supervisors; in other words, they were made finally the acts and judgments of the board of supervisors.

With reference to the publication of the notice: It was published in a newspaper weekly for four consecutive weeks. Judge Kimbrough, the owner of the property at that time, neither made claim to damages for its taking within thirty days after the time fixed in the notice, or within thirty days after the last publication of the notice. The requirement of a given number of days' publication of a notice has been quite uniformly held not to contemplate a daily printing of the notice. It is stated in the notes to Southworth v. Glasgow, 232 Mo. 108, 132 S.W. 1168, Ann. Cas. 1912B, 1267, that it had been so held by the courts of Georgia, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, and Maryland.

We are of the opinion that the statute was complied with in the publication of the notice. The property owners were charged with notice of the requirements of the statute; they could not have been misled as to when they were required to file claim for damages.

Affirmed.


Summaries of

Henritzy v. Harrison County

Supreme Court of Mississippi, Division B
Jan 24, 1938
180 Miss. 675 (Miss. 1938)

In Henritzy, a decade after the construction of its original seawall, Harrison County sought an injunction against a landowner who refused to remove a structure that prevented the county from making improvements to the seawall.

Summary of this case from Daricek Living Trust v. Hancock County

In Henritzy, this Court held that Chapter 319 of the Laws of 1924 complied with the Mississippi Constitution and that title to this fifty-foot seawall right-of-way had vested in Harrison County by virtue of the ten year statute of limitation.

Summary of this case from Mississippi State Highway Com'n v. Gilich
Case details for

Henritzy v. Harrison County

Case Details

Full title:HENRITZY v. HARRISON COUNTY

Court:Supreme Court of Mississippi, Division B

Date published: Jan 24, 1938

Citations

180 Miss. 675 (Miss. 1938)
178 So. 322

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